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Show THE MORNING OGDEN, EXAMINER: UTAH, MONDAY MORNING, MAY 8, 1903. n has refuted all tbe arrusa-linquestioned with reasonableness Great standard brought against it by Britain's finances have been on thl It has brought shout condouble' axtramiets. 1816. The since liable basis the which are In all standard prevailed in the United ditions Publiited Every Day In the Veer by States (theoretically.) - nnill .1900. opposite of those predicted by W. J. The Standard Publishing Cfc and his calamity followers. though gold was the actual standard . Bryan finances have never been nations The that RATES. date, of value many years before SUBSCRIPTION nor haa the nation ever From the beginning of the Civil War j so stable, as under the gold so Dellrered by Cerrler la Ogden been prosperous, until the resumption of specie pay Morn-luWe congratulate our sister ay, deluding Sunday ail-- J standard. nor In neither menu. 1979, gold .71 cti Examiner, per month ... Sete. ver circulated In the United States, republic of the south In having E ingle copies and sensible but our paper money rested chiefly'! adopted tbe sane, safe BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. which prevails standard monetary upon the value of the gold dollar, of the nations the leading Ihe last among of. heard We have probably The Examiner le sent by mail cause have never will Mexico "double stand- earth. the outside o( Ogden, per year... 1.W the to change. regret the success At least quarterly, In advance of The ird. single gold THE EXAMINER 1 i g Tbe wonderful success of our $11.98 suit sale compels us to continue your choice ol any suit in our bouse lor . 16-fo- FEARLESS AND INDEPENDENT The Examiner la a strictly Independent newspaper. It given all aldea an . equal show. The Examiner has no favorites, and no enemies to punish. It will give the news unbiased and unprejudiced. Communications will be received on all subjects presented In respectful language from known Individuals but the true name must be published In full. All letters and communications signed by nom de plumes, or assumed names, will be thrown In the waste basket The brave man never bides behind an assumed name. Don't ask the Editor to be responsible for what you ars ashamed of. Nan Randolph will now, in all go free, and I doubt if any of America wishes her any greater suffering tjan that which he has endured tha last year. Bui the mind that is Jnat cannot wUh she had been spared any of it. It Is tha tendency of the American public to make heroes and heroines out of the prisoners who receive acquittal in tbe courts of Jus- prob-ahillt- y, clt-Ixe- n . hearts. EXAMINER TELEPHONES Every erll- action la the result of either Insanity or a miud which is lost In Ignorance of the great fact That no EDITORIAL ROOMS si real happiness ean come to sny soul ...Ha bd Independent Phene from unworthy motives, desire or Nm Bell Phone - ,.,.... CELEBRATING ROBERT FULTON. The Board of Trade and Transportation of New York has undertaken the preliminary work of arranging for a great marine celebration on Aug. 11, 1907, to mark the hundredth anniversary of the first trip of the steamboat Clermont oa the Hudson River. Thousand! of persons watched the initial trip, ami Ful-toClermont on national her builder, became hero. The Legislature granted to him aad Robert Livingston a monopoly in tha use of steamlioats on ths waters Or ths State. Congreaa comminiloned him to build a steam warship, and honored him by naming If the Robert Fulton. She was launched la ISIS, and la the same year Fulton died, haring lived only fifty years, and having been unable, because of litigation, to reap the full rewards of his ingenuity and hr a, tact It ie proposed to hare a great uaral parade, in which every type of veael propelled by steam shall be Included. Tha aatiom of the earth will be rited te participate, and the thow should be a brave one. New York is .admirably situated for water displays, end the popular success of such an exhibition would be assured from the beginning. ... In such an enterprise the nation might well cooperate. Fulton's death wan the cause of national mourning. Tha whole country would Join In eom-- . memomling the date on which the Clermont first sailed. Even the mignt be GOLD STANDARD TRIUMPHANT. Oa May 1, the gold standard went Into full operation In tha republic of Mexico. The change from the silver standard had been amply provided for In advance, eo that It did not occasion tha least Jar In financial or business circles. By a series of new reguln-tlon- a and laws, tha finance depart, meat had smoothed tha way for the adoption of the new standard, aa a dl. patch from the City of Mexlro announces ; hence the change wan effected without any disturbance of business, and the final establishment of the world's standard of value I hailed generally. In our slater republic to the south, with undisgusted satisfaction. In placing Mexico upon gold basis, the statesmen of that county have acted wleely. All the leading natlona ef tbe world now conduct their business upon the gold bails. The gold Standard la tbe world's standard of financial measurement. Mexico will find that her business with the outside world will be greatly rimplifled and facilitated by her adoption of the gold standard. She will also find that her domestic Industries will prosper of the change. The by rea-o- n of proierlty may not come immediate! , but It Is sure to come by reason of the greater, stability which (he gold standard will Insure, not alone in ths affairs of the government, but in' all rlas.es of bust-nesIn the deeds. without protection, barred ever from own homo whet more pathetic conpicture can life paint for mercy's These suits sell close cash prices lor $15, $18, $80, $82.50 and $25. II Ho suits reserved. yog templation? She had not one mercenary thought, have taken advantage ol our will call am look our suits over you will agree with all the many not one really vicious Impulse In the She was Just willful and beginning. vain. Overguarded from youthful pleasoiler that no such bargains were ever oifered before in Ogden. ures si home, she wanted a "good adShe her wanted beauty time." mired. She accepted the attentions of these professional seducer, of virtue a tributes to her charms. What flattery, and praise and protestations failed te win from her, drink and drugs finally obtained. And she faced the awful truth one day that she had lost everything on earth that makes life worth the living and that tha man who had promised to make amende by marriage for hii here In her downfall, ha d?crted hre. Aa the girl stood before the world, U'l'U acciued of murder, the dignified word, "awful" sprang to one's lips. GRADUATION IN SIAM. ings and rhalra placed on the lawn in with the Inetltutioiia of the hlate end as tools in the11 development of natioui education. The Christian High acho As Nan Randolph stood In the same front. Mualc was furnished by a band tho forces that make for the upbuildposition another word was suggested. Ceremonies Not Very Different From composed of school boys, one of their ing of the government by whose toler- was recently moved to a new aid selection being "Hall, Columbia. The ance it exists. He especially commendlocation, and lias atom 150 bor, This word was. and Is, "shameful. Those in American Schools. There ie nothing of the heroine in tea, the ed the teaching of the Siamese lan- in attendance. The Rev. v. u' lli. graduating class numbered New York, May 7. Graduation exer-cier- s boys presenting a line appearance In guage, saying the language of a nation Clure Is in charge. the girt who fights to keep ths married In Slam do not greatly differ blue hilk psnungi. with white coals should be the language of it schools, lover from returning to Ms wife and SUCCESSOR TO SMITH. who makes It plainly understood to from those of .rhooU in this country, and stockings. There was the usual but that foreign language, also taught all who know her that hi money la according to an account taken from oration and valedictory hy graduates. In the school afforded the young men San Francisco, Cal., May 7. Mnw quite as dear to her a hie love. It le tin-- ' . Slam Observer and Just received The diplomas were distributed by the of the country opportunity to bring impossible to attach any romance to hen-- The occasion was the graduation Hon. Hamilton King, United States new beauty ami life into the language Schmitx announced today that of ths class of 1905 at the Christian Minister to Slam. In hi address he of their fathers. Siam needa appoint Joseph H. Scott as tu such a situation. just at ' If Caesar Young had been precisely High School of Bangkok, which is congratulated teachers and' scholars this time, said Mr. King. educated collector to auccred E. J. Smith. !n AmeriIn landefaulted. Mr. Scott will qualify the young men who are learned the man he was, in every respect, save maintained by tbe Pre.byterian Board that the Institution, although an office tomorrow. The exercise About six jej- can Christian School, had placed Itself guages of modern scholarship and who that he occupied tbe position of a clerk oi Foreign MUsions. on n small .ulary, It Is not at all prob- were held out of door, a Ktag bel.ig in line with the educational Influences of shall translate into the Siamese tongue ago he wag elected and served for tvi able that hie overtures to Miss Ran- erected near one of the school build the country, and hud become Identified carefully prepared text book, to serve years. dolph would have met with uccm or that his wife would have worn widow's weeds today. And Just the moment any money consideration enters Into a woman's love for a man that moment the whole matter becomes squalid and mean and contemptible. When a woman fights to keep a man at her ride, because bla money support her, and not because she would make the same fight if be were penniless, then she is no more heroic or picturesque than tbe dog that fights for the bone In the street Let us hope that Nan Randolph will go free and lead an honist and decent i life In the future, and that shi will have learned her lesson well. So well j that the married men who offer her their attentions snd their purse (ss they are more-- than likely to do) will , not receive encouragement. Men are mere toddlings habe In met- ter concerning the passions and their ' education in and morality, depend upon woman. And let us hope that every girl or woman who Is temnted to start on the . downward road to follow and to accept j the attentions of reckless and dls-- l honorable men, whether married ori single, will pau.e and turn hock after reading the story of Nan Randolph's her at that at But, while we pity and condone, we should refrain from lionizing the evil . -doer! Nan Randolph was les deserving of our commiseration than wa Florence Bunn, who figured in a lmilar role a few yeara ago. Florence Burns had !en vain, and pleasure-loving- , and foolleh. In her desire for admiration and fun, sad she had bees lad sstrsy by a coterie of depraved young men, who made Ihe pureuit and destruction of virtue the recreation of Ihrir lives, Jut as our President make the pursuit of wild game hU relaxation. Both of these tendencies Indicate a mental disease. won tha One of these young nn-girl's heart and promised marriage. Then he changed hie mind. He was found dead, with a bullet in his breast, snd, after a long, terrible ordesl, the girl was freed from prison and declared not guilty of his murder. I never read the case of a woman on trial for her life which awoke more sympathy In my heart than that of Florence Burns. But the story of Miss Randolph's life was quite different. She was yqung in years, but she had brea married, and ahe possessed a vocation. If she bad applied herself to this earnestly It would, have supplied her with the comforts of life. She was In perfect health, and able to work In other fields of usefulness If she failed aa an actress. Yet she encouraged a cheap and commonplace flirtation with a man she knew woe married, and she became hi without compune tlon, and gloried In her power over him. She Sauntered ' herself la pulilic,' Iti garment! and Jewels and carriages obtained wtlh ths money a married man bestowed for her favors. , , It le an ugly, vulgar, unpleasant atrobbed when of all its story, tragic tributes. which lifted It temporarily into something akin to dignity . , There was a certain dignity about the tragic position of Florence Burns. An unmarried girl, under twenty, who finds herself deserted upon life. the world, virtue and reputation lost, i But will n mb-iree-a end-flun- ter fo-t- III ! n fhMI self-contr- Ten Most Popular Weber County Girls to be Sent at the Expense of the Evening Standard and Morning Examiner for a 10 Days Visit, to the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition at Portland, Oregon g thej ? skirts WHEN EDITING WAS FUN. will- ing to forgive the Inventor the grant be received from New York 8tate. The monopoliefo would have a fellow feel-lefor him. Remember BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX tice. Phone.,......itf...i.Ha May 14. THE LESSON OF NAN RANDOLPH Subscribers will confer a favor by There la nothing In Miss Randolph's Informing this office of failure to re- career to cull for great sympathy or to ceive The Examiner before their entitled her to anything but lit pity all breakfast. wrongdoers decrra from humane BUSINESS OFFICE ..No. 120 Independent Phene SO Bell WM. GLASMANN . No. 120 Independent Phone Bell Phone Ha 120 N& 120 of both telephone eyatems closed after S p. m. it till An aged Hartford man was talking about the late General Joseph R. Hawley. "I remember well," he eald, "tha time when General Hawley was an editor In this town. I' remember a story about editing that he told at a banquet fifty yeara ago. The man who Introduced General Hawley began by saying that editors were always up to mischief of one kind or another. He said them wan a Hartford msn who once went to a Hartford editor and said Indignantly: " 'What do you mean, you scoundrel, by printing my name In your obituary column this morning? 'Why,' uld the editor, 'aren't you dead? I thought you were dead, of course. Pont you remember promising me last week that, If you lived till yesterday, you would settle that account of miner It le bard to get the heat of an edicontinued ths Hartford msn. tor, When General Hawley rose at tho banquet he told us about a newspspe friend of his who actually, in good folth, printed an obituary of a men who waa still alive. "This man. the next morning, rushed Into the. editor office and shouted: How dare you print this oblturary of me. sir? Don't you know I'm not dead?" of Hargrave, in front of a little Inn, I dismounted. "I found In the inn ths landlord and another man. They sat side by aid . on a bench. They were both very-old- "Excuse me, laudlord, I said, but can you tell me how far it Is to Brandon? The old man Jumped up and hobbled behind the bar. Brandy? he said. In a thin quiver. 'Yes, Indeed, sir, ana very fine brandy H Is.' "He put up a bottle end glass before me. Ms asked you,' I said, more loudly, how far It la to Brandon.' 'Th best brandy, of course, sir, he answered. 'I don't keep nothing but the best.' In despier I turned from this deaf veteran to the other old msn on the bench. ' '1.00k here,' I said, 'esn you tell me how fsr it la to Brandon? The other old man. with a grateful look, rose and limped hastily to tho bar. 'Thanks,' he said, 'I don't care if " I da' THE PECULIAR j ; I WAITER. Richard Jordan, the famous Scottish lawyer was praising America. 1 will even praise, said Mr. Joradn, "the independence of the American waiter. In Europe the waiter I obsequious. not out of any real reiert for you, but because, without this hypocritical humility and veneration, he would starve to death, snd the walte; need not he an obsequious and fawning hypocrite. Mr. Jordan smiled. J meet the most peculiar waiters. he said. "The other day I said 11 'I'm very sorry," Mid the editor. Sorry? Well, you'd better be. The notice of my death la false, and i'll If you don't retract tomorrow, horsewhip you within an Inch of your life.' This Is the contradiction that the editor printed the t morning: "We regret to announce that the paragraph which stated that John Smith was dead Is without " one: m-x- The Grandest Trip Ten Jolly Girls Ever Had to See the Great Pacific Ocean THIS FREE TRIP INCLUDES Har-er-xv- e berths both ways. fare, round trip. Second-Sleep- ing Third-Me- als on railway trains. Fourth-Bo- ard and lodging at Port- - Js land. Fifth The party will be chaperoned by the Standard editor, wife and daughter, or by a chaperone elected by the successful contestants, v as the former may decide. First-Rail- ; j 'Waiter. Is thin a pork chop or 1 mutton chop?' "Can't you tell by the taste?" th waiter asked. Senator Depew. at a dinner In Wash'No.' I answered. ington. was praising the wit of wo"Well, then.' said the waiter, 'whet men. difference does it make which it is?' " Against this wit," he said, we men re powerless. Even when all the right WHAT A SON! and logic of sn argument Is on our side, woman, with her wit, will nine Thomas W. l,awnn said the other, times out of ten put us to shame. "Thin a msn ono found that, his day of a stork ntsnipulator wh-i-wife had bought a few puffs of false methods he purposed to expose: He Is like the Paint Rock farme;-- , hair. .This displeased him.. He hid In the hall one day, and. Just as the lady and I shall be like the farmer's son. was fixing the false puffs upon her Only I shall art deliberately, where') the son was blundering. brow, he darted in upon her. " 'Mary,' ha Mid reproachtully. 'why "This lad. in the wheat season, drove do you put ths hair of another woman up to the miller's and Submitted a handful of wheat. on your head? "The miller studied the wheat a'-- ; 'Why,' his wlf answered, 'do you snd then said to the boy: put tbe skin of another calf on your lentlrely, " How much has hands, your father got of nr Vl. 7K -- THE WIT OF WOMEN. presidential campaign of 1996, in the Inlted States, Mr. Bryan and bis silver standard followers frequently and between times jtolnted with pride to Mexico ns an illustration of the advantages of the allver standard. It la a matter of no little interest to know whether Mr. Brjan will nurceed in his obvious Intention to get himself nominated In 1908 on n silver standard platform. If he should succeed in this purpose. It will be a "yellow, dog" campaign sure enough; A PERILOUS TOWN. (or tha weakest candidate whom the Republicans could place In nomination could defeat him, hands down. Barney Oldfield, the automobllist. The value of the gold basis la as- wee talking about trip that be had made through Minnesota. suring stability to the finances of n ono "The moat dangerous town lu Minnation has been so abundantly drm nesota.'1 he said. "Is Brandon. sastrated that It ran inn ha i Brandon, and on the nut- - way : : : The trip will include an excursion down the Columbia river to the great Pacific Ocean, the greatest body of water on earth, all . w at the expense of the j : Standard-Examine- r. v . . ; : I i thirHe ain't got no more like It.' th boy answered. 'He's been all mornio' plrkln that out.' " Baltimore. Hay 7. Th biennial convention of ihe order B'Rlth Ahrahaut opened today with u large at'cmlaiii': of delegates from all oarts f th i ! j The young ladies, who will be the guests of the Standard and Examiner from the day they leave until they return, will be entertained only at the best hotels enroute, will travel only on the best equipped transcontinental trains, the best appointed Steamship lines and will have an opportunity to enjoy every pleasure that this magnificent trip affords. See Rules Governing Contest on Another Page vj V |